Building a Coalition for One Health Approach to Preserving Antibiotic Effectiveness - Dr. Bernadette Dunham, Visiting Professor, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, from the 2016 NIAA Antibiotic Symposium - Working Together For Better Solutions, November 1 - 3, 2016, Herndon, Virginia, USA.
More presentations at http://www.swinecast.com/2016-niaa-symposium-antibiotic-use-working-together-for-better-solutions
Call Girls Nagpur Just Call 9907093804 Top Class Call Girl Service Available
Â
Dr. Bernadette Dunham - Building a Coalition for One Health Approach to Preserving Antibiotic Effectiveness
1. Comments by
Bernadette Dunham, D.V.M., Ph.D.
Visiting Professor
Milken Institute School of Public Health
The George Washington University
Former Director
Center for Veterinary Medicine, FDA
Presented to the
National Institute for Animal Agriculture
Antibiotic Use â Working Together for
Better Solutions for
Animal Agriculture and Human Health
November 3rd
, 2016 Herndon, VA
Building a Coalition for a
One Health Approach to Preserving
Antibiotic Effectiveness
The findings and conclusions in this presentation are those of the author and do not necessarily
represent the views of the George Washington University or the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
4. 4
Mission Statement:
Recognizing that human health (including mental health via the human-animal
bond phenomenon), animal health, and ecosystem health are inextricably
linked, One Health seeks to promote, improve, and defend the health and well-
being of all species by enhancing cooperation and collaboration between
physicians, veterinarians, other scientific health and environmental
professionals and by promoting strengths in leadership and management to
achieve these goals.
One Health Initiative Website: http://www.onehealthinitiative.com/mission.php
(The One Health Initiative Autonomous pro bono team (OHI) was co-founded in 2006.)
6. 6
One Health Commission Website: https://www.onehealthcommission.org/
(The One Health Commission is a globally focused organization dedicated to promoting improved health
of people, domestic animals, wildlife, plants and the environment. It is a 501(c)(3) organization,
chartered in Washington, D.C. on June 29, 2009.)
7. 7
Creating a healthy future for
humans, animals and their
environments.
Mission: The One Health Platform is a strategic
forum of stakeholders and a One Health reference
network that aims to enhance understanding of and
preparedness for the current and future outbreaks
of zoonoses, emerging infectious diseases in
humans and animals, and antimicrobial resistance,
including the ecological and environmental factors
which impact on these diseases.
The One Health Platform website: http://onehealthplatform.com/
(The One Health Global Network Webportal was established in 2011)
Lone Simonsen, Ph.D., from the Milken Institute SPH â Supervisory Board Member to the One Health Platform
8. Sir Alexander Fleming (1881 - 1955)
⢠1928 discovered penicillin
⢠1944 knighted
⢠1945 awarded the Nobel Prize
Dr. Fleming cautioned that:
âResistance is a natural counterpart to antibiotics.â
8
âMessieurs, câest les microbes qui auront le dernier mot.â Louis Pasteur
âGentlemen, it is the microbes who will have the last word.â
Louis Pasteur (1822 â 1985)
â˘Developed germ theory
â˘Created pasteurization
â˘Created vaccines for anthrax & rabies
â˘Developed fermentation
9. Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) â Global concerns
⢠Dawn of antibiotic era was 7 decades ago â discovery of penicillin
by Sir Alexander Fleming in 1928 â introduced as a therapeutic in
1943 but by 1947 there were penicillin resistant strains of bacteria.
⢠Today, AMR has become a major international concern⌠further
emphasizing that we live in a global village!!
⢠International travel increases opportunities for microbes to
share genetic material and to spread globally.
⢠AMR is outpacing the development of new countermeasures
capable of thwarting infections.
⢠AMR threatens patient care (human and animal), economic
growth, public health, agriculture, economic security,
and national security.
9
10. September 2014 â Presidential Executive Order
on Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria
The National Strategy outlines 5 Goals and Objectives:
1.Slow the emergence of resistant bacteria and prevent the
spread of resistant infections.
2.Strengthen National One-Health surveillance efforts to
combat resistance.
3.Advance development and use of rapid diagnostic tests
for identification and characterization of resistant bacteria.
4.Accelerate basic and applied research and development for
new antibiotic, other therapeutics and vaccines.
5.Improve international collaboration and capacities for
antibiotic resistance prevention, surveillance, control, and
antibiotic research and development.
10
11. WHO-OIE-FAO 2015 Global Action Plan on AMR
â˘O
bjective 1: Improve awareness and understanding of antimicrobial
resistance through effective communication, education and training.
â˘O
bjective 2: Strengthen the knowledge and evidence base through
surveillance and research.
â˘O
bjective 3: Reduce the incidence of infection through effective
sanitation, hygiene and infection prevention measures.
â˘O
bjective 4: Optimize the use of antimicrobial medicines in human and
animal health.
â˘O
bjective 5: Develop the economic case for sustainable investment that
takes account of the needs of all countries, and increase investment in
new medicines, diagnostic tools, vaccines and other interventions.
11WORLD ORGANISATION
FOR ANIMAL HEALTH
12. United Nations General Assembly - High level
meeting on AMR
12
United Nations held a high-level meeting on
antimicrobial resistance on 9-21-2016.
The member nations embraced the 2015 Global
Action plan on AMR. [http://www.un.org/pga/71/wp-
content/uploads/sites/40/2016/09/DGACM_GAEAD_ESCA
B-AMR-Draft-Political-Declaration-1616108E.pdf]
âSupport a multi-sectoral, One Health approach to
address antimicrobial resistance, including through public
health-driven capacity-building activities and innovative
public-private partnerships and incentives and funding
initiatives, together with relevant stakeholders in civil
society, industry, small- and medium sized enterprises,
research institutes and academia, to promote access to
quality, safe, efficacious and affordable new medicines
and vaccines, especially antibiotics, as well as alternative
therapies and medicines to treatment with
antimicrobials, and other combined therapies, vaccines
and diagnostic testsâŚâ
13. One Health Act of 2016 âŚ
An example of political action:
â˘A bill entitled the One Health Act of 2016 (s.2634) was introduced in
the 114th
Congress this past March. If this legislation is passed by
CongressâŚ
â˘âŚ it would require the Administration and Federal agencies to create
a comprehensive strategyâthe National One Health Frameworkâ
that will outline ways they can work together to address infectious
diseases in animals and the environment, in order to prevent spread
into human populations.
â˘âŚ it would also create competitive grant programs to carry out the
programs outlined in the framework and spur collaboration between
health programs at the state and local level.
â˘âŚ it would also urge international health organizations,
like the World Bank and World Health Organization,
to increase investments in One Health approaches to
global health security.
13
14. Embracing a One Health ApproachâŚ
⢠The âOne Healthâ approach, in which all sectors work together,
leads to the strongest coalition we can make to address AMR and
preserve antibiotic effectiveness ⌠a true, whole-of-society
engagement.
⢠Sectors including human and animal health, agriculture, food
production, government, non-governmental organizations,
patients, consumers, universities, pharmaceutical industries,
environmental scientists, etc.
⢠Together we can help break interdisciplinary barriers, learn from
one another, enhance communication, build long-lasting
relationships and catalyze future transformative collaborations.
⢠Promote education and training on the responsible use of
antibiotics; support research; develop rapid diagnostics; improve
surveillance; develop novel therapeutics; strengthen national
action plans and budgets for implementation of AMR activities,
demonstrate stewardship, and international cooperation.
⢠We all need to be stewards of judicious use of our antibiotics! 14
15. Crossing Bureaucratic BoundariesâŚ
â˘Y
ou can be the agent of changeâŚ. first, seek to understand, then
reach out to other disciplines to âbring the needed expertise to
the tableâ in a collaborative effort to address the needs more
efficiently, and often with an innovative approach not previously
considered.
â˘E
ngage policy/law makers from your local community, state, and
federal levels to embrace a One Health collaborative,
multidisciplinary approach to AMR.
â˘W
ork with granting agencies (and government) to develop cross
disciplinary funding proposals that encourages collaboration and
embraces innovative technologies.
â˘E15
16. Putting the AMR plans into ACTIONâŚ
My colleague, Dr. Amanda Beaudoin,
Director, One Health Antibiotic Stewardship with
the Minnesota Department of Health
will provide an excellent overview of how they set
up their âlivingâ Five-Year Strategic Plan where
progress is regularly reviewed and the plan is
amended as needed to improve implementation.
16
17. â˘O
ne Health Day is an international campaign co-coordinated by the One
Health Commission, the One Health Initiative Autonomous pro bono Team
and the One Health Platform Foundation.
â˘T
he goal of One Health Day is to bring attention around the world to the
need for One Health interactions and for the world to âsee them in actionâ.
The One Health Day campaign is designed to engage as many individuals as
possible from as many arenas as possible in One Health education and
awareness events, and to generate an inspiring array of projects
worldwide.
â˘F
or more information about One Health Day, please contact:
17
Internet: https://www.onehealthcommission.org/en/eventscalendar/one_health_day/contact_us/
18. 18
âScience is far from a perfect instrument of knowledge.
Itâs just the best we have. In this respect itâs like democracy.â
Carl Sagan
Those are the profound words of Dr. Carl Sagan, a man who
was a brilliant communicator of science. His words remind us
that science â like democracy â will change, develop and
transform, but the direction it takes will always rest in our
hands: shaped by our desire to contribute to a better world
through a One Health approach⌠seeking optimal health for
people, animals and our environment.
Thank you!